Hed: Remembering David Lynch: “the individual is cosmic” By Sean Avery Dek: Visionary filmmaking titan David Lynch passed away from his battle with emphysema on Jan. 15, leaving behind an unrivaled artistic legacy.
The late David Lynch was an avant-garde artist, a proud advocate of transcendental meditation and a gifted filmmaker whose tastes bordered on the surreal. At first look, none of those
Filmmaker David Lynch, who died last week, was a Hollywood legend. One of his last projects landed close to his hometown. For no charge, he was the
The Roxy Theater is celebrating the legacy of filmmaker and Eagle Scout David Lynch with special screenings of his debut feature, "Eraserhead."
Finding the words to reflect on and celebrate the life David Lynch is like attempting to shoot down a mourning dove: futile and unnecessary. Lynch was a visionary of his time because he understood that words only carry a story so far.
Tim Carmody writes for DeepLearning.AI and was a film and literature adjunct professor at the University of Pennsylvania. Even after he’d established himself as a brilliant filmmaker and left his hometown far behind, David Lynch described himself as “Eagle Scout, Missoula, Montana.”
David Lynch, who died Thursday, combined Eisenhower-era innocence & experimental cinema to forge a disturbing, darkly hilarious look at American life
Famed director David Lynch, who dared to be different in his often dark and surrealistic storytelling in film and on television, has died. He was 78. “There’s a big hole in the world now that he’s no longer with us. But, as he would say, ‘Keep your eye on the donut and not on the hole,’” wrote a family member on Facebook.
Lynch, the 78-year-old artist and filmmaker, had emphysema from decades of smoking. When the runaway blaze got too close to his home, he evacuated. But not before his health took a serious decline, leading to his passing last week.
He was born in 1946, in Missoula, Montana, to a forest scientist and ... In Jon Nguyen’s documentary, “David Lynch: The Art Life” (2016), Lynch shares a story from around this time.
The surrealist who made “Twin Peaks,” “Blue Velvet” and “Lost Highway” got his start as a painter at Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts.
Lynch’s weather reports attracted a dedicated following in themselves, becoming such a part of the fabric of Los Angeles — his adopted home for many years, and a lifelong fascination of his he often transmuted on film — that his forecasts were later broadcast on NPR affiliate KCRW.